Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump tried to make the case Saturday that he'd do more to help women from the White House than Democratic rival Hillary Clinton, a lifelong champion of women's rights who would become the nation's first female president. "My opponent likes to say that for decades she's been fighting for women, that she's been fighting for children.
Hillary Clinton 's campaign is firing back after rival Donald Trump threatened to bring a woman who had a relationship with former President Bill Clinton to Monday's presidential debate. , the Republican presidential nominee tweeted Saturday, "If dopey Mark Cuban of failed Benefactor fame wants to sit in the front row, perhaps I will put Jennifer [sic] Flowers right alongside of him!" If dopey Mark Cuban of failed Benefactor fame wants to sit in the front row, perhaps I will put Gennifer Flowers right alongside of him! Trump was responding to an earlier tweet from Cuban, a billionaire and Clinton supporter, who said he will be sitting in the front row at the debate.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump tried to make the case Saturday that he'd do more to help women from the White House than Democratic rival Hillary Clinton, a lifelong champion of women's rights who would become the nation's first female president. "My opponent likes to say that for decades she's been fighting for women, that she's been fighting for children.
Donald Trump threatened Saturday to bring Gennifer Flowers, with whom Bill Clinton admitted to having a sexual relationship decades ago, to Monday's presidential debate. The taunt is a response to prominent Trump critic Mark Cuban's plans to sit in the front row of the debate at the invitation of Hillary Clinton's campaign.
Gennifer Flowers blows a kiss to talk show host Larry King during her live interview on CNN's Larry King Live show in Hollywood, CA. According to reports leaked to the press, US President Bill Clinton admitted during a deposition in the Paula Jones investigation to having an affair with Flowers while he was governor of Arkansas.
As government ethics lawyers who have, respectively, counseled the most recent Republican president and the most recent Democratic one, we have watched Donald Trump's campaign with increasing concern. We have come to believe a Trump presidency would be ethically compromised for the following reasons: Opacity.
Trump warms up for Clinton debate with Virginia rally GOP candidate suggests that Gennifer Flowers may be one of his debate guests Check out this story on USATODAY.com: http://usat.ly/2dsBC9m Warming up for Monday's showdown with Democrat Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump stumped in Virginia on Saturday and suggested on social media that he might extend a debate invitation to Gennifer Flowers, a woman once linked to former President Bill Clinton. "Our campaign is about breaking up the special interest monopoly in Washington, D.C.," Trump told backers in Roanoke, Va., the biggest city in the more-conservative western part of the state.
Donald Trump threatened on Saturday to put Gennifer Flowers, a woman Bill Clinton said he had an affair with, in the front row of Monday's debate as a direct result of Hillary Clinton's campaign giving Mark Cuban a front-row seat at the titanic event. "If dopey Mark Cuban of failed Benefactor fame wants to sit in the front row, perhaps I will put Gennifer Flowers right alongside of him," he wrote on Twitter .
Trump threatens to bring Gennifer Flowers to debate - on Saturday threatened to bring a woman that Bill Clinton - had an extramarital affair with when he debates Hillary Clinton - "If dopey Mark Cuban of failed Benefactor fame wants to sit in the front row, perhaps I will put Jennifer Flowers [sic] right alongside of him!"
Hillary Clinton and her top surrogates -- including her husband and former President Bill Clinton and first lady Michelle Obama -- plan to fan out to a handful of battleground states in the days following Monday's first presidential debate in a sign of force aimed at getting more Democrats to the polls. They plan to visit Florida and Pennsylvania repeatedly, with fewer stops in other key states up for grabs and just one visit to Ohio.
Let's stop with criticism of the candidates and look at what Donald Trump and his multiple wives and Hillary and Bill Clinton have ever done for this country - for you. Donald and his wives love to talk and shop.
There's been lots of speculation about the fate of the Republican Party if Donald Trump loses. There's been less speculation, though recent polling suggests it may be in order, about the fate of the Democratic Party if Hillary Clinton loses.
Last week, Bill Clinton was doing a terrible job correcting the media record on his wife's bout with pneumonia, telling CBS News that Hillary Clinton fainted both frequently and rarely - a line so confusing CBS ended up editing it out. This week, Bill Clinton is on the damage control beat, speaking to reporters about the relationship between the Clinton Family Foundation and the State Department, attempting to refute claims that Foundation donors received special access to Hillary Clinton and her staff.
Bill Clinton delivered an emotional defense of his family's charitable foundation Wednesday, applauding contributors for having "validated hope and possibilities." The former president spoke at the close of the final meeting of the Clinton Global Initiative, an arm of the broader Clinton Foundation.
Fewer deep-pocketed donors flocked to the 12th and final annual meeting of the Clinton Global Initiative this week amid the heightened scrutiny that has accompanied Hillary Clinton's presidential bid. Seven corporate donors that sponsored the event in 2014 and 2015 - Coca-Cola, Barclays, Goldman Sachs, Blackstone Group, Laureate Education, Monsanto and Standard Chartered Bank - sat out the 2016 meeting, a review of past donor records shows.
Following weeks of controversy on the campaign trail, the Clinton Global Initiative is laying off dozens of people, Politico reports. As the conference arm of Hillary and Bill Clinton's non-profit organization for the last 12 years, CGI has convened world leaders - with the aid of corporate sponsors - to find solutions for big issues like climate change and educating girls.
Former President George H.W. Bush , who lost a second term to Bill Clinton in 1992, will be voting for the wife of his former bitter rival, according to reports. Kathleen Hartington Kennedy Townsend, daughter of Robert F. Kennedy, recently visited the 42nd president and later posted a picture of herself and Bush to Facebook with the surprising revelation.
Gary Johnson says his running mate is not dropping out of the race: Bill Weld is in this "for the long-haul" https://t.co/xZIyosVupP Gary Johnson Gary Johnson: 'No chance' Weld drops off ticket Poll: Trump, Clinton in tight race in Florida Libertarian VP candidate: Talk of defecting for Clinton 'wishful thinking' MORE insisted Monday there's "no chance" his running mate Bill Weld will leave the ticket for fear the two are taking votes from Hillary Rodham Clinton Gary Johnson: 'No chance' Weld drops off ticket Bill Clinton: State 'wouldn't do anything they shouldn't do' Clinton ad knocks Trump over immigration MORE Donald Trump Gary Johnson: 'No chance' Weld drops off ticket Clinton ad knocks Trump over immigration Clinton to make case to millennials during Philadelphia speech MORE "No, Bill Weld is in this for the long haul and beyond my wildest dreams Bill Weld is my running mate," ... (more)
Hillary Clinton's campaign is aggressively outworking Donald Trump in battleground Pennsylvania, a state the billionaire businessman can scarcely afford to lose and still hope to become president. Despite polling well in Pennsylvania throughout the summer, Clinton's team is nevertheless bearing down in a state her party has carried in six straight elections.
Hillary Clinton returns to the campaign trail Thursday following a bout of pneumonia that sidelined her for three days and revived questions about both the Democratic nominee and Republican Donald Trump 's transparency regarding their health. Clinton's campaign responded with a new letter from her doctor Wednesday declaring her "fit to serve" as president and recovering well from her recent illness.